- [Instructor] If you have access to the exercise filesfor this course and you'd like to follow along with me,you can download those from the course pageon the downloads tab.Once you have those downloaded to your computer,go ahead and stick them somewherewhere you know they're going to be.I'm going to have mine right out hereon my desktop, for instance.Once you have the exercise files folder open,you will see a series of folders inside of therethat correspond to the different chaptersof this course that have exercises in them.Each one of those chapters correspondsto one of the chapters in this course,and as I open up each file,you should be able to follow along on screen,locate the file and open it upand follow along using the exact same steps that I do.

If you don't have access to the exercise files,that's okay too.You can still follow along using your own filesor simply pause the videoand re-create what you see on screenso that you can continue working alongside me.

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Author

Released

11/16/2016

3D is the new "drop shadow"—sometimes overused, but in the right place it can make a dramatic difference in a design. Learn how to use Adobe Photoshop to create 3D elements for commercial design work, in this course with senior graphic design instructor Justin Seeley. These hands-on techniques are for designers who want to add some 3D elements that will take their work to the next level, without going overboard. Justin walks through three projects—an advertisement, a product shot, and a logo—adding the kind of 3D details that make images and text pop off a page or presentation.